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Recycling food waste: it's academic.


Don't even try trashing that half-eaten salad at the University of Oregon's (UO) Annual Folk Festival A Folk festival celebrates traditional folk crafts and folk music. Regional
Denmark
  • Tønder Festival
Estonia
  • Viljandi Folk Festival
USA
  • Newport Folk Festival Tour
  • American Folk-Blues Festival
, the University of Vermont's (UVM UVM University of Vermont
UVM Universidad del Valle de México
UVM Universitas Viridis Montis (University of the Green Mountains aka University of Vermont)
UVM Universal Voice Module (Cisco) 
) Orientation Picnic or Humboldt State University's Spring Fair. The trash stations are manned, making sure you recycle everything from your food-smeared paper plate to soy sauce-soaked chopsticks.

Meet the food waste bin. You can find it at a growing number of college campuses. Students, faculty and staff are waking up to their wastefulness. The nation's colleges throw out approximately 4.5 million pounds of food waste per meal, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the environmental research group Inform Inc. These campuses feed their excess to soup kitchens, pig farms or let it rot in the compost.

"Composting is the new frontier New Frontier

President John F. Kennedy’s legislative program, encompassing such areas as civil rights, the economy, and foreign relations. [Am. Hist.: WB, K:212]

See : Aid, Governmental
 in waste reduction and recovery," proclaims Karyn Kaplan, UO recycling program manager. Last vear, UO recovered 80 percent of the waste at the folk festival--40 percent being compostables.

From aerated aer·ate  
tr.v. aer·at·ed, aer·at·ing, aer·ates
1. To supply with air or expose to the circulation of air: aerate soil.

2.
 piles to bins of worms, the benefits are clear. Banana peels and coffee grinds add up and colleges cash in. Ithaca College The college offers a curriculum with over 100 degree programs in its five schools:
  • Roy H. Park School of Communications
  • School of Business
  • School Health Sciences & Human Performance
  • School of Humanities & Sciences
  • School of Music
 recovers 350 tons of food waste per year, saving $20,000 in landfill tipping fees. Washington State University Washington State University, at Pullman; land-grant and state supported; chartered 1890, opened 1892 as an agriculture college. From 1905 to 1959 it was the State College of Washington.  (WSU WSU Washington State University
WSU Wayne State University
WSU Wichita State University
WSU Wright State University
WSU Weber State University
WSU Western State University College of Law
WSU Winona State University
WSU Walter Sisulu University
) saves $5,000 a year by using the composted end-product--nutrient-rich soil--in landscaping. WSU gains another $50,000 a year by selling its compost to local garden stores and landscapers. Colleges also use compost for biological research, local school field trips, course curricula and demonstration projects.

Collecting and composting isn't always easy, though. "Expecting students to separate the waste themselves proved a disaster," says Mark Darling, Ithaca's recycling coordinator. Sorting by the kitchen staff keeps contamination down and compliance high in most dining halls. Erica Spiegel, UVM'S recycling manager, adds "How does the carrot peel from the kitchen end up at the compost site? Make it easy for the guy peeling the carrots to participate."

But don't be fooled: students participate! At UVM, they asked for biodegradable bags to compost in the dorms. A student research project at Middlebury College yielded a greenhouse heated by composting piles, keeping fresh greens alive during the winter. And students give workshops to the local community at Humboldt's Compost Festival.

The key to success is collaboration. University recycling coordinators share information on the College and University Recycling Council's listserv and at national and regional conferences. CONTACT: College and University Recycling Council, (517)432-5917, www.nrc-recy cle.org/councils/CURC/default.htm.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Earth Action Network, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Glynn, Elizabeth
Publication:E
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 1, 2005
Words:396
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